docwyte said:
Don't fool yourself, you have little to no control from the passenger seat of the car. Your best bet is the initial interview, if the person is giving you a weird feeling, then pass on getting into their car from the get go.
Hmm, I don't know what happened to you instructing at NASA, but I'm glad it hasn't happened to me yet. If I want a student to get off the track, that man is getting off the track, period. This is my club's ground rule. If it needs to happen before pit-in, that's what run-off areas and black flag all is for. I'll have some explaining to do, but my CI will have my back. NASA may say a directed runoff is not safe, but NASA has to stick to a schedule. A club program has the time to unload the whole track. I'm not giving NASA a hard time; if you're running a competition program with an HPDE training component integrated into it, the safety rules must take a different approach some times.
Reciprocity? Two things there.
If they were being dicks for making you do a two-session checkout, national insurance says one, so I guess they did impose on you. Shame shame on them.
Some BMW clubs may need to think about reciprocity, if they want to keep giving instructors three-day weekends for free in exchange for teaching a pair of students Saturday and Sunday. But if they're covering their costs and maintaining a pipeline of returning drivers, why give discounts to NASA, SCCA, and PCA instructors who are looking for more track time without paying the full BMW weekend rate? It is a club after all, not a public utility. I run with two BMW clubs and they're both making that work, with steady wait-lists for student slots AND solo slots.
PCA here will do reciprocity. Hell, they have to. Can't join the club unless you own a porsche. They can't maintain a pipeline of drivers to cover their track costs. For a while they made it on a race-only format with competition cars, a short race school, and provisional licenses. But that died off after a while, so they had to go to an HPDE format to get more people showing up. They have a good turnout of solo drivers, but they need instructors to get people through the pipeline to solo. They let students and instructors drive all three days, instructors only have to take one student, but they still have to pay about 70% of full price. And they sub-contract the whole skid-pad instruction operation out to a group of BMW club instructors. If this all sounds like criticism, it's not; they run a great program here and I always try to fit in as many of their weekends as I can.
SCCA, I don't know. What are they doing for reciprocity? Somebody up there said they have a higher rate of incidents with instructors? And they feel the need for a whole separate PDX program to get people on track, by offering them instruction. Is that because there are two different markets?
NASA makes it work, bigly. I'm told a nicer bunch of folks you will never meet. Maybe all the clubs should do it that way, and then all the tracks would be able to rent out all their weekend slots, and have the revenues to cover unlimited safety upgrades plus repaving every four years. Then maybe we could have SAFER barriers all the way around the track and nobody would need to know how to drive anyway.
I'm not sure whether I've ranted enough, but I'm going to stop now anyway. Even an uncontrollable impulse only lasts but so long.